“To be accepted, I think it’s a great feeling.”
Hafez was joyous about the recent approval of a new design for police officers willing to don the Islamic headscarf or hijab.
Before the decision, a hijab tailor worked with the police tactics training unit, as well as the police equity, diversity and human rights team, to design a head scarf that covers the head and neck of an officer without covering the face.
“Edmonton Police Services (EPS) respects a Muslim woman’s choice to wear the head scarf,” read a statement from EPS.
“The Edmonton Police Service continues to change with the times, as have a number of police, justice and military organizations in western nations that have already modified their uniforms to accommodate the hijab.
“After rigorous testing, it was determined that the head scarf did not pose any risk to the officer wearing it, or reduce officer effectiveness, nor interfere with police duties or public interactions,” the statement added.
Edmonton Sikh officers can already wear turbans.
Muslims make around 2.8 percent of Canada's 32.8 million population, and Islam is the number one non-Christian faith in the north American country.
Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.
A survey has showed the overwhelming majority of Muslims are proud to be Canadian.
Source: On Islam